Amazing Adventures with Dev Reviewed By Bani Sodermark of Bookpleasures.com

Bani Sodermark

Reviewer Bani Sodermark.
Bani has a Ph.D in mathematical physics and has been a teacher of
physics and mathematics at the university level in both India and
Sweden. For the last decade, her interests have been spirituality,
healthy living and self-development. She has written a number of reviews
on http://amazon.com. Bani is a mother to two children.

Melody Boulton, a
psychotherapist, lost her well beloved son Devon to a lung disease in
late March 2013. In contrast to most people who have lost a
child, this transition did not imply a break in their mutual
relationship. Theirs was not a conventional parent child
relationship for Melody and Devon treated each other as peers from a
very early age. This is evidenced by the fact that when Melody was
complimented by others on what a great job she had done raising him,
she would answer, “Actually I’m pretty good at getting out of his
way and letting him grow the way he was meant to”. So when the
summons for Devon came from above, Melody not only sensed them coming
but also participated as an observer in the experience when
the veil between the worlds was being temporarily lifted.

This story goes much
deeper than just the story of a mother who lost her son. Melody’s
interaction with her son went over and above the mother-son relation
into a soul-to-soul connection that transcends space and time,
a connection in which all mutual desires are instantly satisfied in
the silence of consciousness.

In this book, Melody
recounts many of the encounters that she and numerous other members
of Devon’s circle of family and friends experienced with
Devon after his passing, experiences that testify to the truth of a
continued existence after a physical death. Indeed, this book goes so
far as to show that contact with our dear departed souls can be as
real as any other in the physical, and that this interaction can be
enhanced by cultivating the faculty of tuning in to higher dimensions
of consciousness.

“Devon and I are writing
about these experiences to offer grieving parents, especially an
opportunity to open their hearts to the powerful healing these
experiences can offer, illuminating how we can all be supported in
our grief and learn to cope with the loss with the love, guidance and
light hearted joy of our child. Devon and I, as co creators, are
manifesting our capacities to teach the above and guide you into a
realm of love and reality not commonly known or understood.”

It is obvious that
Melody’s skills as a psychotherapist has contributed immensely to
the writing of this book. It explains why she can “see” very
clearly her relation to her son, from a higher partner soul
perspective, forged over several lifetimes together, a
perspective that can change roles, from mother-son, to
teacher-student, to peers having fun, among others. This role
changing is a quality that permeates most of the material in this
book.

The discourse between
mother and son is seemingly light-hearted, but also very wise. It
takes place not only by telepathy, appearance of light orbs, birds
and butterflies among others, but also through mediums and
astrologers. The most important message of this contact, at least as
I see it, is that one does not need to be unhappy after the departure
of a loved one, for everything is connected and there are many ways
that life responds to our cries. Besides, the ties that bind us to
our loved ones, survive after a physical passing.

This book is very
readable. It carries a much-needed message for jaded souls who feel
unloved and tied down by the limitations of their circumstances and
unsure of a future. It will give them hope.